The lack of detailed info on my files also made me go back to WMC. Now WMC itself isn't the best at that either, but there are many free/paid plugins by 3rd parties that greatly expand WMC features. Using a plugin named MediaBrowser, my movie and tv collection provides me far more detail and a nicer interface (obviously that's up to your own opinion).
I suppose you could call it opinion, but this goes way beyond appearances and preferences. WMC doesn't come close to doing what I do with Theatre View, so it's really not an option. I appreciate many users "just want it to work," but that's not really what MC is about. Most of us use MC because of it's vastly superior flexibility, capability and performance. Dumbing it down so it's appealing to those who don't care about these things is not going to serve anyone.
MediaBrowser relies on other plugins to obtain meta data. Some of those rely on sources that may not have as complete a database as you might expect (e.g., recent American titles, no problem; otherwise, hit and miss at best). But that's beside the point. MC plugins are available for most of the same sources. The most powerful option is to use
Personal Video Database to collect the data (it can gather data very efficiently from a variety of different sources—for both movies and TV series). Raldo's
PvdImport plugin is then used to automatically put the data directly from the PVD database. This, of course, it too much work for those who "just want it to work." They will prefer one of the other plugins. Those are probably even easier to configure than MediaBrower (plus whatever plugins it's going to use).
MC has lots of room to grow in the realm of obtaining, managing and displaying video meta data. But the apparent advantages of WMC (and other managers) are largely superficial. In some cases, the "eye candy" aspect is appealing, but not worth trading the MC advantages for. I think a fair analogy is the comparison of MC to iTunes. There will always be those who say, "Why bother with MC? What's wrong with iTunes?" The only correct answer to that is, "Nothing. Use iTunes." It
is a matter of personal preference. And, clearly, MC does very well
not being iTunes.